INICIAR SESIÓNELARA'S POV
"Your brother owes us fifty thousand dollars, Miss Santos."
The words hit me like a punch to the chest. I pressed the phone harder against my ear, certain I'd misheard.
"I'm sorry, what?"
"Fifty. Thousand. Dollars." The man's voice was cold.
"He borrowed it six months ago. The interest has been piling up ever since. He's missed three payments now. We're done being patient."
My legs felt weak. I leaned against the hospital corridor wall, my free hand gripping the edge for support.
"There must be some mistake. My brother doesn't have that kind of money. He wouldn't borrow—"
"But he did." The man cut me off smoothly.
"Borrowed it from us. Spent it. And now he can't pay it back. Which makes it your problem."
"My problem?" Heat flushed through me, anger mixing with disbelief.
"I'm not responsible for his debts."
"You are now." There was no warmth in his voice.
"Family is family, Miss Santos. And in our world, when one person can't pay, the debt passes to the next of kin. That's you."
"That's not legal. You can't—"
"Legal?" He laughed, a sound that made my skin crawl.
"You think we care about legal? Your brother came to us knowing exactly what kind of people we are. He signed the agreement. Now someone has to pay. If it's not him, it's you."
My mind raced, trying to process what he was saying. Fifty thousand dollars. Matteo had borrowed fifty thousand dollars from loan sharks.
Despite everything I'd done. Despite working myself to exhaustion to keep us afloat. Despite paying for rent, food, utilities, everything, he'd gone behind my back and borrowed money from criminals.
"I don't have that kind of money," I said, my voice shaking.
"I'm a nurse. I barely make enough to cover rent. There's no way I can pay you fifty thousand dollars."
"Then you'd better figure something out. Fast." His tone didn't change.
"You have seventy-two hours. After that, the interest doubles. And if you still can't pay..." He paused, letting the threat hang in the air.
"Well, let's just say your brother won't be the only one in trouble."
The line went dead.
I stood there, staring at my phone, my heart pounding so hard. Fifty thousand dollars.
It was impossible. Absolutely impossible.
Rage flooded through me, hot and overwhelming. How could he? How could Matteo do this? After everything I'd sacrificed, everything I'd given up to take care of him, he'd gone and done this.
My hands shook as I pulled up his contact and hit call.
It rang. And rang. And rang.
"Pick up," I muttered through clenched teeth.
"Pick up, Matteo."
Voicemail.
I hung up and tried again. Same result.
"Damn it!" I wanted to throw my phone against the wall. Wanted to scream. But I was standing in a hospital corridor with patients and staff walking past, so I forced myself to take a breath.
He was probably still angry from our fight this morning. Probably ignoring my calls on purpose to punish me.
But we didn't have time for his childish games. Not anymore.
I shoved my phone back in my pocket and tried to focus on my shift. Tried to push down the panic rising in my chest.
Three hours. I just needed to get through the next three hours. Then I could hunt Matteo down and demand answers.
But focusing proved impossible. Every patient I treated, every chart I filled out, my mind was somewhere else. On Matteo. On the debt.
Fifty thousand dollars.
I didn't make that in a year. Didn't even make half that. Between rent, utilities, food, Matteo's expenses, I was lucky if I had a few hundred left at the end of each month.
Where would I even begin to find that kind of money?
My shift dragged on, each minute feeling like an hour. Finally, my relief arrived and I clocked out.
I didn't even bother changing out of my scrubs. Just grabbed my bag and headed straight for the exit, pulling out my phone as I walked.
I tried Matteo's number again. And again.
By the time I reached the bus stop, I'd called him seven times. Each time it rang through to voicemail. Each time my anger grew.
The bus ride home felt endless. I sat by the window, my phone clutched in my hand.
When I finally got back to our apartment, I half-expected to find him there. Thought maybe he'd come home after cooling off and was just being stubborn about answering my calls.
But the apartment was empty. Dark. Exactly as I'd left it that morning.
I dropped my bag on the couch and tried calling again.
This time, after the third ring, he answered.
"What?" His voice was sharp, defensive.
Relief flooded through me so fast it made me dizzy. But it was quickly replaced by fury.
"What?" I repeated, my voice rising.
"What? Are you serious right now, Matteo? I've been calling you for hours!"
"I saw. I was busy."
"Busy?" I wanted to reach through the phone and slap him.
"Busy doing what? Hiding from the loan sharks you borrowed fifty thousand dollars from?"
Silence on the other end. Long and damning.
"Yeah," I continued, my voice shaking with rage.
"I got a call today. From some very unpleasant people who say you owe them money. A lot of money. Money you apparently borrowed six months ago without telling me."
"Elara, I—"
"Don't." I cut him off.
"Don't you dare try to explain this away. Fifty thousand dollars, Matteo! What the hell were you thinking?"
"I was going to pay it back!" His voice rose defensively.
"I had a plan. I just needed a little more time—"
"A little more time?" I laughed bitterly. "They're threatening us, Matteo! They said we have seventy-two hours to come up with the money or—" I couldn't even finish the sentence. The implications were too terrifying.
"I'm handling it."
"You're handling it?" My voice cracked. "How? How are you handling it? By ignoring their calls? By hiding? That's not handling it, that's making it worse!"
"You don't understand—"
"Then make me understand!" I was yelling now, pacing back and forth in the empty apartment.
"Because from where I'm standing, it looks like you went behind my back, borrowed money from criminals, and now you're leaving me to deal with the consequences!"
"I didn't mean for it to get this bad." His voice was smaller now. He sounded guilty.
"I thought I could win it back. I was so close, Elara. I just needed one more game—"
"One more game?" The words made my blood run cold.
"This was for gambling? You borrowed fifty thousand dollars from loan sharks to gamble?"
"I was going to pay it back! I swear, I had it all figured out—"
"Nothing about this is figured out!" Tears stung my eyes but I blinked them back furiously.
"Do you have any idea what you've done? Any idea what kind of danger you've put us in?"
"I know, okay? I know I messed up. But I'm going to fix it. I just need—"
"Need what? More time? More money? Another chance to throw our lives away?" My voice broke.
"I've given you everything, Matteo. Everything. I work myself to death to keep us afloat and this is what you do? This is how you repay me?"
"I never asked you to do any of that!" His guilt turned defensive again.
"I never asked you to take care of me. I never asked you to—"
"You didn't have to ask! You're my brother! What was I supposed to do? Let you end up on the streets?"
"Maybe that would've been better than this!" He shot back.
"Better than having you hold it over my head every time I make a mistake!"
"A mistake?" I couldn't believe what I was hearing.
"This isn't a mistake, Matteo. This is a disaster. A disaster you created. And now we both have to live with the consequences."
Silence again. But this time I heard something in the background. Muffled voices. Movements.
"Matteo?" My anger shifted to worry. "Where are you?"
"I'm fine."
"That's not what I asked. Where are you?"
"Look, I have to go. We'll figure this out, okay? I promise, I'll—"
"Hey! Let me go!"
Matteo's voice suddenly changed. Became panicked. Scared.
"Matteo?" My heart jumped into my throat. "Matteo, what's happening?"
Scuffling sounds. Someone shouting.
"Matteo!" I was yelling now, gripping the phone so hard my knuckles went white.
"Matteo, answer me!"
A crash. A grunt of pain.
Then the line went dead.
"Matteo!" I screamed at the phone. "Matteo!"
Nothing. Just the cold, empty silence of a disconnected call.
My hands shook as I immediately hit redial It rang once. Then twice then went straight to voicemail.
I tried again, and again, and again.
Each time, voicemail.
"No. No no no no." Panic clawed at my chest, making it hard to breathe.
"Please pick up. Please."
I called ten times, still nothing.
My legs gave out and I sank onto the couch, phone still clutched in my trembling hands. Tears I'd been holding back finally spilled over, hot and unstoppable.
Something had happened. Something bad. I heard it in his voice, in the scuffle, in the sudden dead silence.
They had him.
And I had no idea where he was. No idea how to find him. No idea how to help him.
I tried calling again, my fingers shaking so badly I could barely hit the right buttons.
Straight to voicemail.
"Please," I whispered into the phone. "Please be okay. Please."
But there was no answer.
I curled up on the couch, phone pressed against my chest, and let myself cry.
For the fact that despite everything I'd done, despite all my sacrifices, I'd still failed to protect him.
And now I had no idea how to save him.
ELARA'S POV The slide down was loud and violent, a dark, suffocating rush of cold metal that scraped my skin before throwing me out onto a heap of heavy laundry bags. I rolled off them onto the hard concrete floor, the air entirely knocked out of my lungs.For a long time, I just lay there in the dark. I couldn't move. My knees were bleeding, my chest felt like it was caving in, and my throat was raw from screaming at him. The air down here smelled like damp earth and stale detergent, this incredibly normal, boring smell that felt completely wrong after all the gunfire and smoke upstairs.I pulled my knees into my chest and just started shaking. It wasn't a normal cry; it was this dry, ugly sobbing that made my whole body ache.*He knew.* He knew the whole time. Every single time he looked at me, every time he acted like he cared or tried to make me feel safe in his house, he knew he was the one who made me an orphan. And the worst, most disgusting part was that I had actually starte
(ELARA'S POV)The static from the radio died out, leaving a high-pitched ring in its place. The urgent warning hung in the air, a countdown clock we couldn't see, but Dante didn't move. He stayed frozen on his knees, his eyes locked onto mine, a storm of unsaid words crashing behind his dark irises.For a second, I thought he was going to ignore the radio entirely. I thought he was going to give me the answer that was currently choking him.Then, a distant explosion rattled the foundation of the concrete room. Dust rained down from the ceiling, dusting his dark hair with white ash.The spell broke.Dante lunged to his feet, the vulnerability that had just cracked his features vanishing behind a mask of cold, lethal efficiency. He grabbed my arm, his grip firm but careful not to hurt me."We have to move," he said, his voice dropping an octave, slipping back into the tone of the man who commanded empires."No!" I yanked my arm back, the revulsion sharp and electric. "Don't touch me! I’
**ELARA'S POV**The world went white.The sound of the door blowing inward was deafening, a sharp crack of wood and metal that rattled straight through my teeth. Dust and grey smoke flooded the small concrete room, stinging my eyes.Through the haze, a dark silhouette appeared.It was Dante.He didn't look like the man from the penthouse. The elegant, calm billionaire was completely gone. This version of him was terrifying. His coat was stained with soot, his jaw was set like stone, and the heavy black gun in his hand looked like an extension of his own arm. His eyes cut through the smoke, instantly locking onto mine.For a fraction of a second, the entire world went completely still.My heart hammered against my ribs, but it wasn't just from the explosion. I stared at him, and my mind felt like it was splitting in half.I saw the man who had held me gently in his penthouse hours ago.But behind him, the frozen image on the static screen was still burned into my retinas. The younger D
Dante's PovThe moment the voice in my wrist comm cut to static, I moved.I didn’t panic. Panic is for people who don’t have a plan, and I always have a plan. I just recalculated.But when I tried to look around, the penthouse didn’t respond. The smart-glass partitions remained frozen and the climate control had flatlined, leaving the air heavy and dead. That alone confirmed what my gut already knew but my mind didn’t want to admit. This wasn’t some amateur hack from the outside. Someone was inside my walls. They had internal access.I stepped through the pitch-black space, keeping my gun leveled and steady. The glass fragments under my shoes crunched softly, each snap sounding like a gunshot in the suffocating silence.“Elara,” I called out once.Nothing.I bit down on my back teeth. The system was never supposed to allow a silent extraction. Every single movement inside this perimeter should have tripped a domino effect of alarms, physical lockdowns, and lethal countermeasures.
ELARA'S PovThis apartment always felt too safe. That was the first lie Dante built into this place. It wasn't about the expensive floors or the huge glass windows. It was just the quiet. It was the kind of deep quiet that made you think nothing bad could ever happen up here unless he said it was okay.I stood by the edge of the living room with my arms wrapped tight around myself. I was trying hard not to think about how I got here. He brought me here against my will. I kept trying not to think about Matteo, or the blood on the floor, or the cold way Dante had looked at me. He looked at me like I was just a thing he owned now. I am a nurse, so I know what bad situations look like. But this was different. This was just a man using quiet to hide a trap.Across the room, Dante stood by the big glass window and talked into his watch. His voice had no feeling in it at all. He just asked if the outside was clear. A tiny voice came back through the static and said yes. Dante did not rel
ELARA’S POVThe words didn’t make sense at first.They hovered on the screen like a different language, something my mind saw but refused to read.*Recovery Protocol for Subject Elara Santos.*I stared until the letters blurred.“No,” I said, shaking my head. “No, Dante, that’s not real.”My voice didn’t sound like mine. It sounded thin and uncertain.Dante didn’t move or blink. He kept the phone angled toward me, showing a document neither of us could ignore.“You’re reading it wrong,” I said faster, panic rising in my throat. “This is a setup. Someone is trying to confuse me.”“To confuse you?” he cut in.His stare felt heavy, like pressure against bone.“Yes,” I whispered, but it came out weak.Dante let out a short, rough breath. “Elara. This file didn’t get leaked to confuse anyone.”He lowered the phone, letting the screen glow fade from my face.“Kovac doesn’t make mistakes,” he said. “If this is out, he wanted it out.”My throat felt tight. “You keep saying names like I’m supp
ELARA'S POVI couldn't just sit there. Not with Matteo in danger. Not with those men having him.I jumped off the couch, nearly tripping over my own feet as I grabbed my bag and keys. My hands were still shaking so badly I could barely grip them properly.I had to find him. Had to do something. I
ELARA'S POV"You don't get to control my life, Elara!"Matteo's voice bounced off the thin walls of our cramped apartment. I stood in the kitchen doorway, still in my scrubs from last night's shift, exhaustion pulling at every muscle in my body."Control you?" I shot back, my voice rising despite h
### ELARA’S POVThe photograph felt entirely too heavy for a piece of glossy paper.I looked from the image to Dante, then back again, my eyes tracing the stark details captured under the harsh glare of a camera flash. Rain streaks on metal. The looming shadows of shipping containers. Heavy floodli
(Elaras pov)It started with the sound in the corridor behind a soft, uneven rhythm that did not belong in a place like this. Footsteps, maybe. Or something trying too hard to sound like footsteps. My body reacted before my mind could even decide what I was hearing. My shoulders tightened without







